For
most New Zealander’s under about forty, the stories of industrial disruption in
the 1970s and early 1980s seem like fantasy. The thought that a small group of members
of the Boilermakers’ Union was able to hold up the construction of Wellington’s
BNZ Tower or Auckland’s MÄngere Bridge for years seems too far-fetched to be
true. Yet it was, as was the regularity that the Cooks’ and Stewards’ Union or
the Seamen’s Union were able to find an excuse to go on strike at various
holiday periods, tying up the Cook Strait ferries and disrupting travel plans.
And who would have ever thought a union secretary would be brazen enough to go
on national television during such a strike to spit out “the travelling public can
go to hell” as did the National Union of Railwaymen Secretary Don Goodfellow.
Strange as it may seem now, this was all very much the way of the world then.
Thankfully,
those days are behind us and a generally more reasonable industrial relations
climate prevails today. But every now and then there is a return to a mild
approximation of the old ways. Ironically, though, today it is more likely to
be employer groups resorting to the tactics the media of the 1970s and 1980s
would have screamed against as “bully-boys”, “stand-over tactics”, or
“industrial muscle”. A recent example has occurred over a relatively innocuous
Labour Party Bill to give more protection to contract workers in vulnerable
situations. The Bill has been making its way through Parliament over recent
months, with barely a ripple, but suddenly, the employers have noticed it, and
they do not like it, so like the militant unions of old they have pushed the
outrage button.
Of
course, their means are a little different. Mass email campaigns from people
put up by their bosses, having been told only a fraction of the story, and
simplistic media bluster and derision are the modern forms of industrial
bullying, but the intent is no less different from the unions of old – to get
their own way, come hell or high water.
A
reasonable person will quickly see the farce for the sham it is and ask the
likes of the Employers and Manufacturers Association and Business New Zealand
why the tub-thumping has been left too so late in the day. The truth in this
instance is that both organisations have missed the plot altogether, have
failed to understand or even take any notice of what was going on in
Wellington, and have treated the Parliamentary process in a cavalier way
bordering on contempt. After all, they are employers, and Parliament needs to
bend to their will. So the fury overdrive had to begin at the eleventh hour.
Consequently, they will have no credibility in the future when it ever comes to
criticising unions for industrial behaviour, which seems foolhardy. It is also
a salutary reminder that while conflict and bluster are easy to manufacture,
which is why they resort to it, constructive engagement is harder and requires
more effort. Ironically, again, that is the same argument employers have used
to debunk union claims in the past, yet they see no shame in doing the same themselves
when it suits them.
At
least the militant unions of the 1970s and 1980s had a point of principle (albeit
rather warped) behind their industrial arrogance – today’s employers are just
more interested in covering their butts for their own ineptitude. Hardly a good
look, nor a reason to take the future pronouncements of the EMA and Business
New Zealand at all seriously.